Machines are machines,
but soldiers are people who operate machines; who make machines do all sorts of great
things. But unlike soldiers, machines cant think, feel, lead, or follow. Machines
are not committed to our profession.

CSM Gary A. Jones, 111th
MI Brigade

Since the birth of our Army more than 220 years
ago, there have been thousands of changes that have made it the great organization that it
is today. Gone are the muskets, horses, Gatling guns, salt pork, brown coffee cups, tin
trays, M-14 rifles, Jeeps, OV-ID Mohawks, and, eventually, grease pencils. No longer does
the Armys inventory include the equipment without which we once believed we could
not do our jobs. The old hand-powered light table and other high-speed, low-drag equipment
are gone. Instead, we now have the All-Source Analysis System, Ground-Based Common Sensor,
and unmanned aerial vehicles. On the horizon, as products of our Battle Command Battle
Lab-Huachuca's efforts, we see emerging technologies that will make our present equipment
obsolete.

For almost 30 years, I have seen the
doctrine of our Army change based upon the intelligence that our soldiers provide the
commanders. Commanders no longer think of us as a secondary battlefield operating system
when they do their intelligence planning------they think of MI first. Properly deploying
assets and using intelligence correctly is a major concern for all commanders. Commanders
think of their MI soldiers and NCOs as the "early warning system" in all types
of operations. Our commanders want to ensure that we get the training we need to fulfill
that critical mission.

Soldiers Are Our
Credentials

Despite
all of the changes that have occurred in our Army, there are two constants: the soldiers
and the noncommissioned officers (NCOs) who lead, train, and care for them. The same
caliber of professionals who fought with George Washington, Robert E. Lee, George Patton,
and Douglas MacArthur are serving America and the world today. Soldiers from the rank of
private through command sergeant major still support and defend the Constitution of the
United States of America every day by obeying the orders of the officers that lead them.

From Hawaii to Maine and from Alaska to
Florida, Americas young men and women have come together and formed the only
first-class Army in the world. During the darkest of days and darkest of nights, they have
made the difference between success and failure in war, peace, and humanitarian efforts
that span the globe. Women and men of different ethnicities and religious beliefs are
Americas "credentials." They provide the staying power that remains while
systems and organizations come and go.

As the senior enlisted soldier in the MI
Corps, I know there would not be an MI Corps sergeant major without great soldiers and
noncommissioned officers in our ranks. It is not me who makes our Corps great------it is
our soldiers and NCOs.

Thanks to Our NCOs

As Brigadier General Charles Canham
(September 1944) said, "our soldiers are our credentials." Without our great
soldiers, military intelligence would not be the combat multiplier that it is today. This
issue of the Military Intelligence Professional Bulletin is dedicated to all
MI soldiers and NCOs who keep our Corps "Always Out Front." We dedicate this
issue to the------

Soldiers who served with Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Knowlton
(our MI hero) during the Revolutionary War.

Soldiers who turned defeat into victory in World War II.

First soldier to fall in Vietnam.

Soldiers who went to Panama with the XVIII Airborne Corps.

Soldiers who gave their lives in Southwest Asia.

MI soldiers who are pulling guard duty right now in some
remote spots in Europe and the NCOs that must care for them.

Soldiers in Bosnia, Haiti, Korea, Fort Hood, Fort Bragg,
Fort Belvoir, and other locations around the world where there is a need to know and find
the enemy.

This issue of MIPB is for all
soldiers, young or old, who wear MI brass. For those who analyze, intercept, cue,
interrogate, translate, and perform other intelligence functions, this is our way of
saying "Thank you."

On behalf of Major General Thomas, our
Corps commander, I want to personally thank every MI soldier for believing that excellence
is not just a word, but, rather, our way of life. I also want to thank every NCO for
training our soldiers to the highest standard, for leading them through tough times, and
for keeping faith in our leadership.

Dont forget that "Always Out
Front" starts with soldiers. The 21st century belongs to all of us in military
intelligence: soldiers, NCOs, commissioned officers, and civilians.